- Series
- PDE Seminar
- Time
- Tuesday, April 22, 2014 - 3:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skile 006
- Speaker
- John Hunter – University California, Davis
- Organizer
- Geng Chen
Surface waves are waves that propagate along a boundary or
interface, with energy that is localized near the surface. Physical
examples are water waves on the free surface of a fluid, Rayleigh waves
on an elastic half-space, and surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) on a
metal-dielectric interface. We will describe some of the history of
surface waves and explain a general Hamiltonian framework for their
analysis. The weakly nonlinear evolution of dispersive surface waves is
described by well-known PDEs like the KdV or nonlinear Schrodinger
equations. The nonlinear evolution of nondispersive surface waves, such
as Rayleigh waves or quasi-static SPPs, is described by nonlocal,
quasi-linear, singular integro-differential equations, and we will
discuss some of the properties of these waves, including the formation
of singularities on the boundary.